The Early American Republic

A History in Documents

Reeve Huston

Description

The early years of the American republic witnessed wrenching conflict and change. Northerners created an industrial order, which brought with it troubled relationships at work and within families. White southerners extended plantation slavery while the anti-slavery movement grew above the Mason-Dixon line. In the West, Native Americans battled newly arrived yeomen, entrepreneurs, and planters for control over land. Throughout the young nation numerous groups--African Americans, poor white men, women--fought for full citizenship, while others vigorously opposed their bids for equality. The Mexican-American War (1846-1848) marked the end of the period with violence that prefigured the Civil War.

Using such primary sources as diaries, letters, political
cartoons, photographs, speeches, engravings, newspaper debates, paintings, and the memoirs of participants, The Early American Republic: A History in Documents recreates the drama of that era. Englishwoman Rebecca Burlend recounts the hardships and victories of her life on the Illinois frontier. In a letter to an ally, Thomas Jefferson explains his Indian policy, while the Native American leader Tecumseh makes his case for Indian unity against white Americans. James Henry Hammond, a wealthy planter, instructs his overseer on how to manage slaves, and Joseph Taper writes his former master about the freedom he enjoys after escaping to Canada. A blackface minstrel tune and Frederick Douglass's account of being beaten up by white ship workers illustrate the emergence of a virulent form of
racism. A list of instructions from New York Democratic leaders shows how parties drew ordinary voters into politics, and Congressional speeches reveal the fierce emotions that fueled the sectional crisis. A picture essay explores the complexities of American families in ten group portraits. By weaving these historical documents together, Reeve Huston conveys the challenges and culture of the foundational years of the nation.

Chapter 3: Expanding the National TerritoryAcquiring the LandIndians, White Settlers, and the Federal GovernmentSquatters and the Federal GovernmentLife in the Western Farm SettlementsExpanding SlaveryBeyond the
Mississippi

Chapter 4: The Transformation of the NorthBefore the Industrial RevolutionEconomic InnovatorsReligious InnovatorsInnovators in Family LifeA New World of Wage LaborOrigins of the American Labor MovementThe Beginnings of Mass Immigration

Chapter 5: Masters and SlavesThe Struggle for ControlThe World of the EnslavedResistance, Repression, and Rebellion

Chapter 6: Picture Essay: Picturing Families

Chapter 7: The Triumph of Partisan DemocracyCreating a White Male ElectorateRe-creating Party PoliticsParty Issues, Party PrinciplesPolitics without Parties

Chapter 8: Race, Reform, and Sectional ConflictA New Anti-Slavery MovementThe Re-emergence of American
FeminismA Woman's Rights Movement EmergesSouthern Leaders Defend SlaveryAnti-Abolitionism and a New Racial Regime in the North

Epilogue: Becoming a Continental NationRefiguring American NationalismAnglos and Mexicans in the Conquered TerritoriesThe Sectional Conflict Deepens

TimelineFurther ReadingWebsitesText CreditsPicture CreditsIndex

The Early American Republic

A History in Documents

Reeve Huston

Author Information

Reeve Huston is Associate Professor of History at Duke University. He is the author of Land and Freedom: Rural Society, Popular Protest, and Party Politics in Antebellum New York (OUP, 2002), which was the winner of the 2001 Theodore Saloutos Prize of the Agricultural History Society and the New York State Historical Association's 1999 Dixon Ryan Fox Manuscript Prize.